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EDITORS’ NOTES

Quite possibly the photo negative of the New York Trio's difficult second album, Twentytwo in Blue features Sunflower Bean opening up and luxuriating in their prodigious talent. Key to its success is the positioning of Julia Cumming. She’s front and center here, taking the vast majority of lead vocals and dusting the band’s imaginative dream-rock with an unmissable star quality. She’s light and mesmeric on the album’s poppier moments (“I Was a Fool,” “Twentytwo”) and an impassioned presence when the trio dart confidently towards punky, political edges (“Crisis Fest,” “Puppet Strings”).

EDITORS’ NOTES

Quite possibly the photo negative of the New York Trio's difficult second album, Twentytwo in Blue features Sunflower Bean opening up and luxuriating in their prodigious talent. Key to its success is the positioning of Julia Cumming. She’s front and center here, taking the vast majority of lead vocals and dusting the band’s imaginative dream-rock with an unmissable star quality. She’s light and mesmeric on the album’s poppier moments (“I Was a Fool,” “Twentytwo”) and an impassioned presence when the trio dart confidently towards punky, political edges (“Crisis Fest,” “Puppet Strings”).

TITLE

TIME

Burn It

4:19

I Was a Fool

3:33

Twentytwo

4:32

Crisis Fest

3:31

Memoria

3:42

Puppet Strings

4:00

Only a Moment

4:15

Human For

2:23

Any Way You Like

3:43

Sinking Sands

2:32

Oh No, Bye Bye

4:02

11 Songs, 40 Minutes

Released: Mar 23, 2018

℗ 2018 Mom+Pop

Ratings and Reviews

4.5 out of 5

23 Ratings

23 Ratings

Spelling ibu
, 01/13/2018

22 in Blue

Show you can still feature decent music without all the explicit lyrics!

Jangofire
, 03/25/2018

I liked their first album better

There’s something about the production of this album that’s very stifling. The guitars are buried and they have no bite. Her vocals are are upfront but they lack true passion. It’s a little plastic sounding. The bass sounds muddy. All the critics love this album, but they all say the same thing, which is that the band has grown up because they have one political song on this album. The problem is that song, Crisis Fest, is not a great song. It feels calculated, like the band said “hey we should write a protest song. The critics will love it!” But there isn’t any passion in the vocals. It’s like she was afraid of mussing her hair when she sang it. Now for the positive. Only A Moment is a brilliant record. It has a beautiful, haunting melody, and the song is sung with real heartbreak. The production is brilliant too. I love the guitar parts. There is some beach boys and Phil Spector stuff going on here, but it is uniquely a Sunflower Bean song.

Overall it’s a frustrating album to listen too. Like another review said here, which is spot on, it sounds like 70s easy listening radio. I love music from the 70s but this sounds like it was produced by Barry Manilow’s producer or England Dan and John Ford Coley’s. You may have to google them. Lol.

Lord of Awesome
, 03/23/2018

Sounds well produced

great music for insomniacs to find a way to get some sleep. The old lady who lives next to me really thought this music was wonderful as it reminded her of the 1970 AM smooth sounds she used to listen to.